Expanding Access to Early Childhood Development Using Interactive Audio Instruction : Guidelines for Program Design and Reportback on Prototyping in the Democratic Republic of Congo
A large body of solid evidence demonstrates the significant effects of early childhood education and development (ECED) interventions on children’s success in school, long-term social integration, and improved life chances. Interactive audio instru...
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Format: | Working Paper |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2015
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2014/09/20255493/world-expanding-access-early-childhood-development-using-interactive-audio-instruction-innovation-challenge-2014 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/23252 |
Summary: | A large body of solid evidence
demonstrates the significant effects of early childhood
education and development (ECED) interventions on children’s
success in school, long-term social integration, and
improved life chances. Interactive audio instruction (IAI)
provides one solution to the challenge of providing high
quality ECE at scale and at reasonable costs. The IAI medium
allows for the development and delivery of both teacher and
caregiver training and direct instruction, using best
practices in ECE, and has demonstrated powerful results in
contexts as diverse as Honduras, Nepal, El Salvador,
Indonesia, Zanzibar, Malawi, and Paraguay. The document
outlines a general approach to high-quality IAI production
for ECD, and uses the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC)
case study to detail the development process. It also
provides technical recommendations for how to scale-up
production and delivery in the DRC and considerations for
program adaptation in other similar contexts, including an
outline of necessary steps and components, estimated costs
of a program with broad reach and content depth (including a
financial model for production and program implementation),
and a results monitoring and evaluation framework. The
attached report is divided into two parts. Part one outlines
the process for scaling up an IAI program - from initial
start-up in a given community, to large scale expansion in a
country. It highlights the main steps in the production
cycle, the roles and responsibilities of government and
communities, and provides useful tips for practitioners at
each stage of the process. Part two provides a summary of
how this process was followed in DRC and lessons learned. |
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